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St Paul, the great
Christian missionary, was born perhaps
in 10 CE, in the Cilician city of
Tarsus. His family was Jewish and from
them he inherited Roman citizenship.
St Paul was privileged to
have been born a Roman citizen at a time
when it was not yet a universal right
for people in the empire. Initially
confined to freeborn natives of the city
itself, as Roman control was extended
throughout Italy and then to the lands
bordering the Mediterranean and beyond,
certain individuals and communities were
given this right. At the time of St
Paul's ancestors, one way of attaining
to Roman citizenship was serving in the
Roman army for twenty-five years.
However, because of sabbath and Mosaic
food prescriptions this profession would
not have been normally possible for a
Jew. The second way by which Roman
citizenship could be gained was slavery.
It was known that during the two
centuries preceding St Paul's time,
thousands of people were deported from
the eastern Levant to Italy and made
slaves. In the course of time some of
these were able to distinguish
themselves by their skill and profession
and were either freed by their masters
or bought their freedom and thus were
given Roman citizenship. A remote
ancestor of St Paul, after obtaining
this citizenship, seems to have returned
to his native city Tarsus and
re-established the family business.
Neither Acts nor his letters give enough
information about St Paul's ancestors or
parents. He is known to have hod a
married sister in Jerusalem and a nephew
(Acts 23:16). From one of his letters we
learn that he had some distant relatives
(Rom 16:7, 11,21).
The most important
privilege that Roman citizenship
conferred on a subject was that he
enjoyed legal protection and could not
be scourged and had the right of appeal
to the emperor in person, hence St
Paul's journey to Rome to appeal to
Caesar. It is thought that during the
floggings he endured (2 Cor 1 1:25), the
Apostle may have not revealed his
citizenship because of the fact that he
wished to follow Christ in his
suffering. Even if they were condemned
to death, Roman citizens could not be
crucified. In the course of time,
however, it seems that the avaricious
government officials began selling this
right as admitted by the cohort
commander Claudius Lysias to St Paul: 'I
acquired this citizenship for a large
sum of money' (Acts 22:28). A citizen's
responsibilities included the
performance of military service, from
which Jews were exempted on religious
grounds such as sabbath and kosher food.
There are several
theories about why the Apostle chose the
name by which he is known today. Paul's
cognomen, 'Paulus' the name by which he
was known, was probably chosen because
of its similarity to his Hebrew name
'Saul'; as it means 'small' it might
also have been an allusion to his size.
New citizens would take on the first two
names, the praenomen and nomen, of the
official granting their admission. Thus,
'Paul' might have also been the name of
the patron of that unknown ancestor who
granted the latter Roman citizenship. By
the time of the early empire, when St
Paul was born, the use of two names
seems to have been acceptable, at any
rate in the New Testament, thus Judas
called Barsabbas (Acts 15:22) etc. The
Apostle must have had a second name
which is not mentioned. Whatever the
reason for choosing it, 'Paul' was a
rare name even among Gentiles. It has
also been suggested that the Apostle may
have chosen the name after his first
Gentile convert known by name, Sergius
Paulus in Cyprus.
St Paul would probably
have carried a birth registration
certificate for identification purposes
when travelling. The information of
citizenship was included in the birth
registers whose authorized copy could be
obtained to be displayed when questioned
by authorities. From the various
references to his Roman citizenship in
Acts, it is clear that St Paul valued
this privilege which certainly helped
him at times of trouble.
Acts and his letters make
it clear that St Paul worked to support
himself and those who were with him.
This was a period when boys usually
learnt their craft from their fathers,
which was often the family's business.
The nature of his work is clearly stated
as tentmaking when he stayed with Aquila
and Priscilia: 'and, because he
practiced the same trade, stayed with
them and worked; for they were
tentmakers by trade' (Acts 1 8:3).
Given St Paul's
rabbinical background there is nothing
extraordinary about this; Jewish sources
indicate that rabbis were expected to
work and not to profit from their study
and interpretation of the Torah. This
does appear to been the case and there
are several references to working hands.
In his address to the elders of
Ephesus
the Apostle reminds them of this, saying
'these very hands have served my needs'
(Acts 20:34); also when he says 'we
toil, working with our hands' (1 Cor
4:12) or 'nor did we eat food received
free from anyone. On the contrary, in
toil and drudgery, night and day we
worked, so as not to burden any of you'
(2 Thes 3:8). These remarks also answer
the questions about financial sources of
the Apostle's missionary journeys. In
spite of the gifts he seems to have
received from Christian communities for
which he expresses his gratitude, most
of the time he relied on his own
resources, a fact which is often hinted
at in his letters and clearly expressed
in the one addressed to the Philippians.
'I find myself, to be
self-sufficienl...still, it was kind of
you to share in my distress' (Phil 4:1
1,16).
It is possible that St
Paul's family had made their money
equipping the Roman legionaries, who
used very large tents, made of leather
panels stretched together so that rain
water would run off. The Roman legions
stationed in Syria may not have required
leather tents but used the traditional
goat-hair tents similar to those of the
present day nomads. These are made of
the rough cloth manufactured from goat's
hair, which in the past was known as
cilicium and took its name from Glida.
Tentmaking might well have embraced not
only the manufacture and the repair of
these large, military tents, but also a
range of related leather and woven
goods. Apart from military tents, there
would have been considerable demand for
awnings, booths and canopies from
vendors at market places and elsewhere.
Since there were many Roman legions
based on the upper Euphrates and in
Syria tentmaking was perhaps a very
profitable profession, considering the
flourishing animal husbandry in the
region since early antiquity.
Within the family and
Jewish community he was called Saul,
Paul being the Latinized form he used
when speaking Greek; this he did well
and idiomatically, as befitted one who
had grown up in a cosmopolitan and
largely Greek city. He would probably
also have spoken Aramaic, the language
of Palestine and the whole Near East,
where he spent fairly extended periods.
As he had a strict Jewish upbringing,
which was followed by study in Jerusalem
where he trained to be a rabbi, he would
have known Hebrew too. In the Jewish
Diaspora he dwelled on his Jewish
background. Elsewhere, in conversing
with Greeks he spoke their native tongue
and in the world of Romons he would
emphasize his Roman citizenship.
If St Paul's family were
not members of the Pharisees, then at
some stage he became one; this was a
sect that observed strict ritual purity
and adherence to Mosaic law. Its members
thought that they alone could interpret
the Torah correctly and felt their
responsibility to teach other Jews the
ways of living righteously. Saul, the
name chosen for him, was the name of the
first king of the Jews about a
millennium before. The Pharisees and
other such Jewish sects regarded the
Christian movement as a threat and so it
is as a persecutor of the Christians and
witness to the death of St Stephen, the
first Christian martyr, that St Paul
first appears in Acts.
The only available
physical information about the Apostle
comes from the apocryphal Acts of Paul.
Here, Onesiphorus, a man of Iconium, who
wants to receive St Paul in his house,
waits on the 'king's highway' coming
from Lystra, for 'a man of little
stature, thin-haired upon the head,
crooked in the legs, of good state of
body, with eyebrows joining, and nose
somewhat hooked, full of grace: for
sometimes he appeared like a man, and
sometimes he had the face of an angel',
his description by Titus whom St Paul
had sent before him to the city to
announce his arrival. The fact that the
commander of the soldiers who arrested
St Paul in Jerusalem thought that his
prisoner may have been 'the Egyptian'
they were looking for (Acts 21:38), may
Imply that the Apostle had a
wheat-coloured complexion. The Apostle
himself may have been conscious of his
insignificant physical look because he
admits that this could be used against
him by his enemies [2 Cor 10:10). The
'short dark hair, domed brow and black,
pointed beard' became the distinct
features of his physiognomy in
Byzantine
art.
St Paul is not included
among the Twelve Apostles, but regarded
as the Thirteenth Apostle. By the sixth
century he replaced St Matthias, who had
taken the place of the traitor Judas
Iscariot after the latter's death (Acts
1:26). Byzantine iconography usually
depicted the Apostle looking to his
right, with the book of his letters in
his left hand, garbed in a dark green or
dark blue tunic on which he wears an
open dark red cloak.
As is well known, St Paul
was converted to Christianity after a
vision of the risen Christ appeared to
him on the road to Damascus. Blinded, he
was led to Damascus and there, after
three days of fasting and praying, he
recovered his sight, was filled with the
Holy Spirit and then baptized (Acts
9:3-19; 22:6-16; 26:12-18).
There have been
innumerable attempts by theologians and
others to understand and explain
precisely what happened at this turning
point in his life. All that can be said
briefly, is that St Paul's theology
should perhaps be traced to his
experience of conversion. He claimed to
have received his gospel 'through a
revelation of Jesus Christ' (Gal 1:12);
this in turn led to his proclamation of
salvation through the reconciling grace
of God; thus the death of Christ for the
atonement of sins was God reconciling
the world to himself through Christ.
In whichever way St
Paul's vision and conversion are
understood, it is clear, that like the
prophets of the Old Testament, he saw
himself as chosen by God for a specific
task, namely, to be an apostle
(messenger of the church] to Gentiles.
For him the Christian message, that
Christ died to atone for the sins of man
and for the salvation of man, was
resurrected and ascended to heaven, was
both the fulfilment of Jewish messianic
hopes and the basis for a united
humanity; love, reconciliation and
salvation were central themes of his
theology. This clear message of the
Apostle may have been the reason why he
did not became an object of a separate
Christian cult, such as that of
St John
in Ephesus,
St Barnabas in Cyprus or
St
Peter in Antioch.
After his conversion,
there followed a period of solitude in
Arabia, a word which is probably to be
understood as somewhere in 5yria, before
he refurned to Damascus, where he spent
three years preaching the doctrine of
the crucified and risen Christ. This
antagonized the Jews of Damascus. 'But
his disciples took him one night and let
him down through an opening in the wall,
lowering him in a basket' (Acts 9:25).
He returned to Jerusalem where he met
Sts Peter and James, the brother of
Christ, and he was then sent as an
apostle to his native city of
Tarsus.
He was subsequently
fetched and brought to
Antioch on the
Orontes by St Barnabas to help him
there. At Antioch, the converts included
many Gentiles, a situation which
ultimately led to a crisis from which St
Paul emerged as the advocate of Gentile
conversion. The controversy, which
lasted several years, had at its heart
Jewish purity laws, which made Jews
reluctant to eat with non-Jews. The
latter, not being circumcised or bound
by the obligations of Mosaic dietary
observances, were regarded as impure. As
the breaking of bread and the drinking
of wine were central to Christian
fellowship, there was clearly an
impasse. The resolution of this, St
Paul's decision to convert Gentiles,
ensured that Christianity did not remain
just another Jewish sect, but in time
became a universal religion.From
Antioch
on the Orontes, in about 47, Sts Paul
and Barnabas set out on their First main
missionary journey to Cyprus and then to
Pisidia and southern Galatia in central
Anatolia, returning to
Antioch on the
Orontes next year by sea from the
Pamphylian city of Attaleia by way of
Palestine.
On a second journey,
about 49-52 accompanied by Silas and
Timothy after Lystro St Paul travelled
through Cilicia to Galatia, then to
Alexandria Troas ond on to Greece, once
again returning by sea to Caesarea and
from there to Antioch on the Orontes,
this time by way of
Ephesus.
On his third missionary
journey, 53-57, St Paul again visited
the Galatian cities on his way to
Ephesus, where he remained for about
three years. From there he visited
Greece to which he returned again, by
way of Alexandria Troas, on finally
leaving from Miletus.
His last brief visit to
his native land was whilst being taken
as a captive to Rome, when ships were
changed at Andriace, port of
Myra in
Lycia. The date of most of St Paul's
journeys corresponds to the reign of the
emperor Claudius (41-54) whose rule was
known to be milder and more peaceful
than that of his predecessor Gaius
Caligula (37-41) and his successor Nero
(54-68}. When the latter succeeded
Claudius in 54, St Paul was on his third
journey. It is not known if he would
have been able to carry out his journeys
during the persecutions of Caligula or
Nero.
After his third
missionary journey, St Paul went to
Jerusalem. There he caused a riot by the
Jews, who thought, mistakenly, that he
had broken Jewish law by taking Gentiles
into the Temple. He was arrested, but as
a Roman citizen, was treated fairly. St
Paul was then taken to Caesarea, where
the Roman governor kept him in prison to
avoid problems with the Sanhedrin. When
the next governor tried to send him to
the Sanhedrin for trial, St Paul claimed
his right as a Roman citizen to be put
on trial at Rome. He arrived there about
60 and lived under house arrest for two
years. The unfinished narrative of Acts
closes with him awaiting trial.
The circumstances of St
Paul's death are not known and there is
conflicting evidence. According to one
tradition he made a further missionary
journey before being re-arrested,
imprisoned in Rome and sentenced to
death. The most widely accepted view is
that he was killed in about 62 during
the persecution of Christians in Nero's
reign as told in the apocryphal Acts of
Paul. |